Interested in Trading Risk-Free?

In this article, we will cover the dead cat bounce pattern, which is often a trap for traders looking to get long.

I will do a deep dive into how to trade the pattern and the deadly consequences of timing your entry incorrectly.

What is a Dead Cat Bounce?

The dead cat bounce is a chart phenomenon which occurs during bearish moves. Simply put, the dead cat bounce pattern is a long-awaited correction of a brutal bearish trend.

Imagine a stock is in a strong downtrend. Naturally, there are a large number of short sellers in the stock. However, some traders might decide that the stock has reached its lowest possible point.

These traders will look to close their short trades and some will even look to get long.

This of course leads to more buying pressure and the stock finds its footing. After this short bounce, the stock will once again proceed in the direction of the primary trend, leading to a swift sell off.

Develop Your Trading 6th Sense

How to Trade the Dead Cat Bounce

Now we need to discuss the steps for opening a dead cat bounce trade. It is crucial to mention that timing is very important when you trade this pattern. If you don’t stick to the trading rules of the dead cat bounce chart pattern, you might end up losing your shirt.

Opening a Dead Cat Bounce Trade

After you identify the dead cat bounce pattern, you should short the stock when the price action breaks the last bottom created.

The timing of your trade entry is crucial. If you don’t open your trade on time, you might miss a significant part of the price decrease. After all, the further decrease of the dead cat bounce formation is an impulsive move.

Dead Cat Bounce Stop Loss

The dead cat pattern could prove “deadly” if you don’t use a stop loss order. What if you are wrong and this is not a dead cat bounce pattern? What if you are actually short selling a stock, which has put in a significant bottom and ready to make a strong move higher.

When these reversal moves occur, they are sharp and fast. This pain of course can intensify itself if you are trading on margin.

Trading a Dead Cat Bounce without a Stop Loss

In the image above, we see symptoms of a real-life dead cat bounce:

We identify a relatively strong bearish trend.

The price breaks the last impulse upwards.

The stock then closes a candle below the last bottom confirming the dead cat bounce pattern.

That is a sure deal right? So, why place a stop loss order?

Dead Cat Bounce – Trade Gone Wrong

When reviewing the above chart, you might say to yourself, “No big deal! It will definitely start dropping again!”

Now what? A simple continuation trade will lead to enormous financial and emotional pain. This sharp counter move higher all took place in less than an hour!

For this reason, you will always want to place a protective stop loss order when trading the dead cat bounce.

The correct location for your dead cat bounce stop loss is above the peak created during the bounce.

Since this might confuse you, I will show you where your stop loss should be in the previous trade demonstrations:

Dead Cat Bounce – Proper Stop Loss

As you can see, taking the quick loss is critical to staying in the game for the long-term.

Taking Profits – Dead Cat Bounce

When you discover a dead cat bounce pattern, you should aim for a minimum price move equal to the previous trend impulse. In other words, if the price starts dropping suddenly and you confirm a dead cat bounce pattern afterwards, then you should expect the price to drop at least with the same size. Have a look at the below example:

Yahoo starts with a strong bearish trend. We classify this first selloff as “Impulse 1” because it is simply the first impulse of a bearish trend. Suddenly, a dead cat bounce pattern appears on the chart.

The stock price attempts to pick up, but then it breaks the level of its last bottom, which leads to impulse 2.

Since the target for a dead cat bounce is the size of the prior range, we simply add this to the low that is broken. As you can see in the above chart, we have highlighted where the pattern completed and you should book your profits.

Dead Cat Bounce Trading Example

Now that we discussed all the important rules regarding the dead cat bounce, I will now show you a real trading example with this chart pattern. We will apply the rules we discussed above in order to walk you through the trade.

Below are the steps for how to place the trade:

Identify a relatively strong bearish trend

Mark the bearish impulse with a bearish trend line

Price breaks the trend line and increases

Mark the level of the last bottom

Price breaks the last bottom, confirming the pattern

Short the stock

Place a stop loss order above the top

Stay in the market until the price creates a bearish move equal to the initial impulse

Let’s now see how these 8 trading rules look on a dead cat bounce chart:

Dead Cat Bounce – Real-Life Example

This is the 3-minute chart of Nokia from April 29, 2016. The image illustrates the steps of the dead cat bounce trading.

The image starts with a relatively strong bearish trend, which we have marked with the red arrow on the chart.

Then we put the blue bearish trend line on the trend’s impulse.

The price increases through the blue trend. We have marked the bullish price move with the green arrow on the image.

Since the blue trend is broken, we need to indicate the level of the last price bottom. This is shown with the black horizontal line on the chart.

In the red circle, Nokia’s price breaks the lowest point of the initial price impulse.

This is where we sell Nokia.

Then we place the stop loss order above the top created in the beginning of the new price decrease. We have marked the stop location with a red horizontal line.

Now, we need to see if the price is going to complete the last step (8) by reaching the minimum target of the pattern.

Dead Cat Bounce – Walking Through the Trade

Again, we mark the two bearish impulses with the blue rectangles on the chart.

After the price confirms the dead cat bounce pattern, the stock continues to trend in a bearish direction. When we apply the size of the first impulse over the second impulse which we are trading, we are able to identify a minimum target.

As you see, the price completes the minimum target less than 25 minutes after the pattern is confirmed. At the same time, our trade is constantly protected by our stop loss order.

It is important to emphasize that timing is crucial when trading a dead cat bounce. If we don’t enter the market in the right moment, there is a big chance that we miss a significant part of the further bearish move. Therefore, make sure you short the stock exactly in the moment when you see a candle closing below the last low of the stock.

Conclusion

The dead cat bounce is a pattern, which occurs during bearish price moves.

The pattern represents a price pick up in the time of the bearish trend. However, after the increase the price drops further, breaking its lower bottom.

The psychology behind the pattern is that the initial short sellers consider that the stock has hit a bottom. Therefore, some close their short trades. And others even buy the stock attempting to catch a reversal. This gives a better short entry for sellers, who open new short trades. This causes the stock to drop, sometimes even stronger.

To identify a dead cat bounce, you need to implement the following steps:

Identify a stock which is in a strong bearish trend.

Spot a price increase, which breaks the tendency of the previous trend impulse.

Wait the price to break the last bottom created.

When you trade a dead cat bounce pattern you need to:

Open a trade when the price breaks its previous low

Put a stop loss above the created top

Stay in the trade until the newly created impulse is equal to the initial impulse in terms of size.

Step-by-step Guide for Trading dead cat bounce stocks:

Identifying a relatively strong bearish trend

Marking the bearish impulse with a bearish trend line

Price breaks the trend line and increases

Marking the level of the last bottom

Price breaks the last bottom, confirming the pattern.

Shorting the stock

Placing a stop loss order above the top created in the time of the breakout

Staying in the market until the price creates a bearish move equal to the initial impulse.

Put Your New Knowledge to the Test

Want to practice the information from this article?get trading experience risk-free with our trading simulator.

Al Hill is one of the co-founders of Tradingsim. He has over 18 years of day trading experience in both the U.S. and Nikkei markets. On a daily basis Al applies his deep skills in systems integration and design strategy to develop features to help retail traders become profitable. When Al is not working on Tradingsim, he can be found spending time with family and friends.